WEBVTT 00:00:06.985 --> 00:00:12.081 As dawn breaks over Athens, Pheidias is already late for work. 00:00:12.081 --> 00:00:14.831 The year is 432 BCE, 00:00:14.831 --> 00:00:17.990 and he’s the architekton, or chief builder, 00:00:17.990 --> 00:00:21.920 for the Parthenon— Athens’ newest and largest temple. 00:00:21.920 --> 00:00:27.051 When completed, his masterpiece will be an enormous shrine to the goddess Athena, 00:00:27.051 --> 00:00:31.011 and a testament to the glory of the Athenians. NOTE Paragraph 00:00:31.011 --> 00:00:36.112 But when he arrives onsite he finds five epistatai, or city officials, 00:00:36.112 --> 00:00:37.812 waiting to confront him. 00:00:37.812 --> 00:00:40.410 They accuse Pheidias of embezzling gold 00:00:40.410 --> 00:00:43.825 designated for the temple’s sacred central statue. 00:00:43.825 --> 00:00:47.960 He has until sundown to provide all the temple’s expenses 00:00:47.960 --> 00:00:53.808 and account for every flake of gold— or face the judgement of the courts. NOTE Paragraph 00:00:53.808 --> 00:00:58.836 Though he’s insulted by these false charges, Pheidias isn’t surprised. 00:00:58.836 --> 00:01:02.326 Pericles, the politician who commissioned the Parthenon, 00:01:02.326 --> 00:01:04.634 has many enemies in city government, 00:01:04.634 --> 00:01:08.054 and this project is somewhat controversial. 00:01:08.054 --> 00:01:12.234 The public is expecting a classic temple in the Doric style: 00:01:12.234 --> 00:01:15.868 simple columns supporting a horizontal entablature, 00:01:15.868 --> 00:01:18.214 crowned with a triangular roof. 00:01:18.214 --> 00:01:23.340 But Pheidias’ plans are far more radical by Athenian standards. 00:01:23.340 --> 00:01:28.473 His designs combine Doric columns with a sweeping Ionic frieze, 00:01:28.473 --> 00:01:34.015 hosting a vast panorama of the city’s Great Panathenaic festival. 00:01:34.015 --> 00:01:38.782 Not only will this sculpture show humans and gods side by side— 00:01:38.782 --> 00:01:42.312 something never before seen in a temple’s décor— 00:01:42.312 --> 00:01:46.357 it will also cost much more than the traditional approach. 00:01:46.357 --> 00:01:50.917 Praying to the Gods that his colleagues have been keeping track of their spending, 00:01:50.917 --> 00:01:53.711 Pheidias sets off to prove his innocence. NOTE Paragraph 00:01:53.711 --> 00:01:58.656 First, he checks in with his architects Iktinos and Callicrates. 00:01:58.656 --> 00:02:00.406 Rather than using a blueprint, 00:02:00.406 --> 00:02:04.167 they pore over the syngraphai, or general plan, 00:02:04.167 --> 00:02:07.242 and paradeigma, a 3D model. 00:02:07.242 --> 00:02:12.373 Without an exact blueprint, the team often has to resolve issues in real time, 00:02:12.373 --> 00:02:17.789 guided only by careful calculation and their instinct for symmetry. NOTE Paragraph 00:02:17.789 --> 00:02:21.709 Maintaining this symmetry has proven especially difficult. 00:02:21.709 --> 00:02:27.794 The Parthenon is built on a curve with the columns leaning slightly inwards. 00:02:27.794 --> 00:02:29.034 To project strength, 00:02:29.034 --> 00:02:32.927 and potentially keep the columns looking straight from a distance, 00:02:32.927 --> 00:02:39.455 the architects incorporated entasis, or slight bulging, in each column. 00:02:39.455 --> 00:02:41.085 For the temple’s other elements, 00:02:41.085 --> 00:02:45.669 the team calculates symmetry by employing relatively consistent proportions 00:02:45.669 --> 00:02:47.089 across the design. 00:02:47.089 --> 00:02:51.739 But their shifting plans require constant recalculations. 00:02:51.739 --> 00:02:54.609 After helping solve one such computation, 00:02:54.609 --> 00:02:57.406 Pheidias collects his colleagues’ gold records 00:02:57.406 --> 00:03:00.576 and heads off to receive a special delivery. NOTE Paragraph 00:03:00.576 --> 00:03:05.100 Immense marble blocks for the Parthenon’s pediment have just arrived 00:03:05.100 --> 00:03:08.050 from quarries at Mount Pentelikon. 00:03:08.050 --> 00:03:09.986 The usual ramps would collapse 00:03:09.986 --> 00:03:14.086 under the weight of these 2 to 3 ton stone blocks, 00:03:14.086 --> 00:03:18.136 so Pheidias orders the construction of new pulleys. NOTE Paragraph 00:03:18.136 --> 00:03:20.246 After recording the additional expense 00:03:20.246 --> 00:03:23.096 and supervising the construction all afternoon, 00:03:23.096 --> 00:03:26.046 he finally arrives at the sculpture workshop. 00:03:26.046 --> 00:03:31.232 His sculptors are carving 92 mythical scenes, or metopes, 00:03:31.232 --> 00:03:33.532 to decorate the temple. 00:03:33.532 --> 00:03:37.505 Every carving depicts fighting from different epic battles— 00:03:37.505 --> 00:03:42.445 each a mythical representation of Greece’s victory over Persia 00:03:42.445 --> 00:03:45.455 about 40 years earlier. 00:03:45.455 --> 00:03:49.285 No temple has ever used so many metopes before, 00:03:49.285 --> 00:03:53.963 and each scene adds to the temple’s ballooning expenses. NOTE Paragraph 00:03:53.963 --> 00:03:57.933 Finally, Pheidias turns to his primary responsibility, 00:03:57.933 --> 00:04:01.309 and the focal point of the entire temple. 00:04:01.309 --> 00:04:05.485 Covered in thick layers of gold, minutely decorated, 00:04:05.485 --> 00:04:08.152 and towering above her worshippers, 00:04:08.152 --> 00:04:13.957 this will be a statue of the city’s patron and protector: Athena Parthenos. 00:04:13.957 --> 00:04:18.067 When the temple is complete, throngs will gather on its perimeter— 00:04:18.067 --> 00:04:21.066 offering prayers, performing sacrifices, 00:04:21.066 --> 00:04:25.849 and pouring libations for the goddess of wisdom. NOTE Paragraph 00:04:25.849 --> 00:04:27.709 Pheidias spends the rest of the day 00:04:27.709 --> 00:04:30.246 designing finishing touches for the statue, 00:04:30.246 --> 00:04:34.656 and as the light fades, the epistatai arrive to confront him. 00:04:34.656 --> 00:04:39.229 After looming over his records, they look up triumphantly. 00:04:39.229 --> 00:04:42.729 Pheidias may have accounted for the temple’s general spending, 00:04:42.729 --> 00:04:47.216 but his records show no mention of the statue’s gold. NOTE Paragraph 00:04:47.216 --> 00:04:52.017 At that moment, Pericles himself arrives to save his chief builder. 00:04:52.017 --> 00:04:55.567 The temple’s sponsor tells them that all the gold on the statue 00:04:55.567 --> 00:05:00.544 can be removed and weighed individually to prove Pheidias’ innocence. 00:05:00.544 --> 00:05:02.654 Assigning laborers to the task— 00:05:02.654 --> 00:05:06.723 and charging the officials to watch them late into the night— 00:05:06.723 --> 00:05:09.717 Pheidias and his patron leave their adversaries 00:05:09.717 --> 00:05:12.053 to the mercy of mighty Athena.